Category: Internet of Things

Posts relating to the internet of things, IoT and M2M technologies

  • Sense-T and the Tasmanian economy

    Sense-T and the Tasmanian economy

    On Networked Globe I have an interview with Sense-T’s director, Ros Harvey.

    Sense-T is a project to connect the entire state to the internet of things using a sensor network monitoring soil, water and other environmental conditions to help the state’s agriculture and business communities.

    Harvey’s ambitions for the project are high where she sees Sense-T even having the potential of rekindling the interest of the state’s students in science and technology courses.

    It’s a brave project that means a lot to a state that’s doing it tough.

    Similar posts:

  • Moving from an industrial era to a data age

    Moving from an industrial era to a data age

    The last two weeks have been pretty hectic with Cisco, Salesforce and Microsoft events in Melbourne, as a result there’s a huge backlog of posts to put up.

    One of the interviews that has worked out is with Cisco’s Vice President for Globalisation, Wim Elfrink, which is up on the Decoding the New Economy YouTube channel.

    In it Wim covers how the next wave of upcoming nations, the TIPSS – Turkey, Indonesia, Poland, Saudi Arabia and South Africa – threaten to leapfrog the developed world and the opportunities for businesses in a world where everything is connected.

    Similar posts:

    • No Related Posts
  • Garbage In and Garbage Out

    Garbage In and Garbage Out

    UK tech site The Register reports that Google Flu Trends has been dismal failure with the service over-reporting the incidence of influenza by a factor of nearly 12.

    The reason for this problem is the algorithm used to determine the existence of a flue outbreak is that it relies on people searching for the terms ‘flu’ or ‘influenza’ and it turns out we tend to over-react to a dose of the sniffles.

    Google Flu Trends’ failure illustrates two important things about big data – the veracity of the data coming into the system and the validity of the assumptions underlying the algorithms processing the information.

    In the case of Google Flu Trends both were flawed; the algorithm was based on incorrect assumptions  while the incoming data was at best dubious.

    The latter point is an important factor for the Internet of Machines. Instead of humans entering search terms, millions of sensors are pumping data into system so bad data from one sensor can have catastrophic effects on the rest of the network.

    As managing data becomes a greater task for businesses and governments, making sure that data is trustworthy will be essential and the rules that govern how the information is used will have to be robust.

    Hopefully the lessons of Google Flu Trends will save us from more serious mistakes as we come to depend on what algorithms tell us about the data.

    Similar posts:

    • No Related Posts
  • Apple’s long game

    Apple’s long game

    It’s always risky to make predictions about Apple, particularly when they are silly. The company plays a long game and isn’t known for panicked releases of me-too products.

    Time is ticking for Apple to announce an iWatch, say analysts is a good example of a silly prediction about Apple’s future products and something that’s quite rightly criticised by Daring Fireball’s John Gruber.

    As I’ve pointed out before, the watch market is tiny compared to the smartphone with the entire global wristwatch industry’s sales making up only one-seventh of Apple’s iPhone sales.

    Part of the problem with stories like CNBC’s is the tech media’s focus on consumer goods, particularly in the internet of things and wearable technology markets.

    Analysts like those quoted in CNBC’s story fall for this fallacy and overlook that the IoT market profits are going to come from the backend, B2B applications of the technologies.

    With Apple we’re already seeing this with iBeacon being deployed in sports stadiums and shopping centres – Apple’s recent partnership with United Airlines to provide inflight entertainment is another step towards locking up business deals.

    There’s no doubt those business deals will flow into the consumer market and an iWatch may well be part of Apple’s longer plan to lock customers into their products.

    However claiming Apple have 60 days to launch an iWatch is plain silly, particularly when you have a company with a track record of not being panicked into launching me-too products and playing the long game.

    Similar posts:

    • No Related Posts
  • Can the community secure the Internet of Things?

    Can the community secure the Internet of Things?

    As more devices become connected Cisco Systems hopes the security issues can be addressed by the developer community.

    “The Internet of Everything is not only turn every company into a technology company but its going to force every company to truly become a company that delivers security,” says Christopher Young, Senior Vice President of Cisco’s Security Business Group.

    Speaking at the Australian Cisco Live! Conference in Melbourne today, Young described how business is going to have to change the way it treats the data it collects from sensors.

    “Not just in consumer security,” continues Young. “If I’m using technology or I’m delivering a service that’s leveraging technologies like cloud or connected devices and creating information about individuals or organisations through these connected devices then a consumer or enterprise is going to expect a level of security.”

    Young sees three major ways that security is becoming more challenging for organisations; changing business models, a dynamic threat landscape and increasing complexity.

    The latter point is the area that focuses many executive’s attention in Young’s experience with audiences he speaks to nominating complexity and fragmentation as their greatest concern.

    “They get so many products and so many devices and so many tools and so much complexity they really don’t know, in so many cases, where to focus their efforts.”

    Young cites Cisco’s Chief Security Officer, John Stewart, that the most fundamental security defence is getting the basics right.

    Earlier this year at the release of the company’s 2014 security report, Stewart spoke to Networked Globe on how businesses are struggling with the complexity they face.

    “Even the most sophisticated and well funded security teams are struggling to keep on top of what’s happening,” Stewart said.

    This problem ties into the other areas that Young identifies, particularly the ‘industrialisation’ of the malware world.

    “We have more well funded, more innovated, more determined adversaries than we’ve ever had as an industry.

    “It used to be some high school kid in his room trying to infect a bunch of machines with viruses or some guy from Nigeria sending you an email asking you for a hundred bucks and he’ll give you a thousand bucks later.

    “The world we live in today has nation states and criminal syndicates and very well funded, very sophisticated attackers so hacking has become an industrialised activity.” Young says, “here’s supply chains involved, there’s support agreements written; the bad guys will even sell each other a contract.”

    Young’s views echo those of Sophos Labs’ Vice President Simon Reed who said last year that “now there’s money involved, there’s serious effort, the quality of malware has gone up.”

    Part of the solution Young sees involves getting the community involved which is the motivation behind the Cisco Security Challenge announced last week.

    “You can only just guess and imagine what all the different security challenges will look like in a world that’s just starting to get formed.”

    “Let’s get the community involved in trying to solve some of the problems that we know are going to be inherently introduced by IoE.”

    Similar posts:

    • No Related Posts